onthedarkside Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 The Texas legislature is currently considering a bill to heavily restrict the generation of wind and solar energy, University of Texas at Austin research scientist Joshua D. Rhodes revealed in a tweet. The bill in question is Texas SB 624, co-sponsored by Senators Lois Kolkhorst, Mayes Middleton, and Bryan Hughes. It establishes new permit requirements for affordable “renewable energy” — not for dirty energy sources, such as coal. If passed, it would take effect this September. READ MORE https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/lifestyle-buzz/texas-considers-new-bill-that-could-severely-limit-residents-use-of-solar-power-it-would-turn-all-of-texas-into-an-hoa/ar-AA1c3ZnK?li=BBnb7Kz
BritManToo Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 Fake news .......... applies only to commercial installs. "the bill applies to facilities with a capacity of 10 megawatts or higher to connect “with a transmission facility.” "
Popular Post placeholder Posted June 4, 2023 Popular Post Posted June 4, 2023 4 minutes ago, BritManToo said: Fake news .......... applies only to commercial installs. "the bill applies to facilities with a capacity of 10 megawatts or higher to connect “with a transmission facility.” " As the article points out, if you're a landowner in Texas and want to have wind turbine installed on your property you need the permission of all your neighbors if the turbine is located less than 3000 feet from the property line. No such rules apply to fossil fuel plants. "According to state legislators, the bill’s purpose is to protect wildlife, water, and land from the effects of energy generation. But it’s telling that the proposed law applies only to nonpolluting wind and solar, rather than heavily polluting energy sources like coal and oil that have a much harsher impact on our air and our planet." 4
stevenl Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 8 minutes ago, BritManToo said: Fake news .......... applies only to commercial installs. "the bill applies to facilities with a capacity of 10 megawatts or higher to connect “with a transmission facility.” " Fake you say, so this is not true? "It establishes new permit requirements for affordable “renewable energy” — not for dirty energy sources, such as coal." 2
KhunLA Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 Wind generator / windmill permit makes sense, since in the tornado belt. And 10+megs is enough to kill anyone, and then some, if an oops, So not recommended for the DIY crowd. Not that our simple home solar system wouldn't kill if touching the wrong thing at the wrong time. Our if the grid wires. Hopefully the regs make sense, and not more Nanny state, pushing the in state oil sales.
ozimoron Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 The usual obsequious Luddite response in servitude to fossil fuel companies. 1 1
Credo Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 This knee-jerk reaction against renewables is befuddling. I understand people questioning those big, ugly windmills, but solar is much less intrusive. Mostly, I can't understand how people would take a stand against energy that is largely free, has no pipelines, isn't subject to the whims of geopolitical clashes and sanctions. Leaking oil pipelines and toxic derailments aren't a problem with solar or wind. I've never heard of a sunshine leak. For the big boys who need to play in the dirt, build a WATER pipeline from the great lakes to the Colorado River. Make the Desert Green Again.
Tug Posted June 4, 2023 Posted June 4, 2023 13 minutes ago, Credo said: This knee-jerk reaction against renewables is befuddling. I understand people questioning those big, ugly windmills, but solar is much less intrusive. Mostly, I can't understand how people would take a stand against energy that is largely free, has no pipelines, isn't subject to the whims of geopolitical clashes and sanctions. Leaking oil pipelines and toxic derailments aren't a problem with solar or wind. I've never heard of a sunshine leak. For the big boys who need to play in the dirt, build a WATER pipeline from the great lakes to the Colorado River. Make the Desert Green Again. It’s not befuddling to me at all it’s all about protecting big oil companies no more no less.to heck with the environment or people it’s all about the oil companies protecting their interests hope it flops but probably will pass the Texas legislature imo is corrupt 2
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now